click1911 said:
Years ago I bought the Time Life Library of Photography."
OMG--I read that entire series of books in the mid-1970s and early 1980's as a kid. It had so much great information. I loved
The Camera,
The Studio,
Color, S
pecial Problems,
The Darkroom,
The Great Themes, and
Photojournalism the most. It was a fantastic series of books, undoubtedly! I loved also
The Amateur Photographer's Handbook, the various John Hedgecoe books (32 titles), and Harry S. Asher's old book which was named
Scientific Principles of Photography. The History of Photography is another interesting title.
Lots of books out there, filled with great photography too. The Rolleiflex Photography Annual is an interesting series: almost ALL the images will be in square, Rollei 6x6 cm aspect, and most all were shot with either a Rolleiflex or Rolleicord, with either the 75mm or 80mm normal lenses. Only the rare examples would be with the wide- or tele-rollie cameras. These books were from the 1950's. The 1958 issue is superb. Kind of "the best images from one year" type books. Similar are old "Photo Annual" magazines of 200,250 pages. Fascinating to look at. Sort of
the Instagram Square, but decades earlier.
Thrift shops have a TON of large picture books, often $3-$4 each. Most of the 50 United States, and all regions, and ALL the continents have been chronicled in books, back in the day when photographers were sent on 3-week to 120-day to six-month assignments, so they could get a real, true feel for the area they were shooting.
A Day in The Life of America, A Day in the Life of Australia, neat photo books, like time capsules.
The cool thing is to look at old books, and see 250 people in a public square, and NOT ONE of them is isolated and dicking around with a phone. people doing stuff like, gasp, talking to one another, or reading a newspaper, or working on a puzzle, etc..